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Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.) 1854-1972, December 25, 1956, Image 26

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045462/1956-12-25/ed-1/seq-26/

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HI AND LOIS ——J__ f mum? id »ut we dont y SURE we do/ vou "1 r you dope/
[7 CAN’T UNDERSTAND OWCK ATTmT 1 VOUR MAXTOR"hoLDING uP" P ''I" 1 " 1 ”" Cu' PPI
BEETLE BAILEY | MM I —"T
SivH^^t§*> 17 «|y il* , I V
r ..._ =aB J£ ITS 8 O'CLOCK ALREADY " J- ,YEAH' *.<
/ MERRY • / WHAT TIME L, Af £^<=°S|Si l !" "&S ,E
( I 1 *»' (IS IT. JACKIE S ) -7 TOYS IS BROKE / j—' v\ORD IS THATS 'A
, - " -' V— --y— iJ gyjyn)
DR. GUY BENNETT— , - , , , ,_
thank BHf you NEVER STOP / EVEN THOUGH YOU’RE
"T"'"'l VOU,MISS PEOPLE, PO I " / THE PATIENT, VOU \
e E
Uj.u . ■—'- ~ '
--1 HE SETS SO MANY GIFTS 1 ■'* ...BUT IT’S FUN ? i*(p>fc.
mam that me can’t play withJ watching him v / c\.
r: LIKE TO GO OVER TO ALVIN’S &-Tts^£^V
[ HOUS6 ON CHRISTMAS ol I I » CTffiV* —\~ ,
tangr flAjfr
JOHNNY HAZARD z* u<t \
LOOK AT PROBLEM' IF WE \ LANPINC RIGHT & \ { 4? J jf
SOCKED IN DOWN TO WERE SCHEDULED 1 ] COULDN'T BE SURE WHERE WE'D f\ S Lk<i _ 1
THE GROUND AS PAR FOR LANDING WE I! ,Sa r COME DOWN.' V \ [frcP r \EK /H
AWEAD AS THE EYE COULD RIDE IT OUT I ■ I 1/ P® 15^
Answer* to Our President*
1— President Woodrow Wilson
spoke to the American soldiers
at Hume. Prance on December
25. 1918.
2 Clara Barton, the founder
of the American Red Cross, was
born on December 25. 1821. at
Houses Wanted
W« Talk to People Doily
Who Wont to Buy In:
Langley Park
Adelphi
Takoma Pork
Silver Spring
CAU
JU. 1-I*oo
BAINUM
REAL ESTATE
Muh pit L It ng Pea tor*
I I
Oxford. Mass , while James Mon
roe was President.
3—President Abraham Lincoln
and his cabinet decided on De
cember 25. 1861. to release the
Confederate envoys Mason and
Slidell who had been taken off
the British vessel Trent on the
high seas.
iQuestions on Preceding Page)
w
I
I 0 . t.ailiM
EACH ACCOUNT
INSUMO TO SIO,OOO
I I. C. MORTON & CO. I
| »oik»rw, 0 C. • T»w IW| |
**>•«• Oltnxt 71 TWO
r>».» »m M aooxLrr !
I «b ronut nnvHMB savixo* I
| NiM I
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I City —i — (tAti
111 "L'l\
if Season’s Greetings |
jS and Thanks for your
I VALUED PATRONAGE |
ks •«! N«» t,* nil 0« An., *. H
fg NW.NA I 1410 MS JU fnu It
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Today's Assignment for —
JUNIOR EDITORS
Tommy and the Toys on Christmas Day
Tommy had a wonderful Christmas day. He received so many
toys he hardly knew which to try first. He beat the drum, tossed
a large ball back and forth and marched a wooded soldier up and
down the floor.
Tommy played so long and so hard he becafne tired and fell
asleep. While sleeping he had a strange dream that the toys
became very big and played with him as if he were a toy. The drums
gave him a beating. The ball tossed him up in the air many times.
And the wooden soldier marched him up and down the floor until
he became too tired to move.
That’s when Tommy woke up. And there were all the toys
just where he had left them. The smiling lad picked up each toy
and carefully put it away In the toy box.
You can have these toys if you just paste down the picture
on cardboard and color with crayons. Cut out around the edges
and fold forward on the dotted lines. Then the picture will stand
up and you can see how the wooden soldier forced Tommy to
march while the other toys watched.
(The winner of the $lO award for this idea Is Martha Schaaf
of Hopewell, Va. Send your suggestions for Junior Editors in care
of this newspaper.)
(Violet Moore Higgins. AP Newsfcatures)
Tomorrow:_The Man in the Moon
Poles' Schools Map Drive
To'Bring Back Truth'
WARSAW. Dec. 25 (/P).—A
"bring back the truth” campaign!
is under way in Poland’s schools.
Old textbooks, instruments of
political indoctrination, are being
thrown on the rubbish heap.
Children are learning for the
first time of the part played by
their countrymen who fought
with the Western armies and
non - communist resistance
groups in World War 11.
I The changes are part of Po
land's "democratization.”
| After January 1 Russian lan
guage study will be optional, on
equal terms with English, French
and German. It has been obliga
itory from the fifth grade of
jelementary school and through
out high school.
| A look at the English primer
formerly used in the second year
;of high school shows the Russian
influence over Polish education.
;This book was printed in Mos
cow in 1954, and all its explana
tory notes are in Russian.
‘Modesty’ First Chapter
Its first chapter is entitled’
“Modesty—by J. Stalin.”
Other chapters are drawn
from such assorted sources as
the English Victorian novelists,
speeches by "peace fighters,”
manifestos of the British Com
munist Party and essays of Mark
Twain.
The exercises include these
sentences for translation into
Russian: “Thousands of capital
ists. large and small, go bankrupt
in the United States every year
and their workers are turned off
"The rank and file American
worker does not agree with the
imperialist policy of the Ameri
can Government.”
This book has now been
scrapped. Others like it are go
ing the same way as fast as the
Education Ministry and publish
ing houses can replace them.
History Most Affected
History appears to be the sub
ject most affected. History for
merly was taught from the works
of Soviet authors. Trybuna Ludu, j
organ of the Polish United Work-1
ers (Communist) Party, says
children now are hearing of the
part played by the Poles in the
Battle of Britain, the North Af
rican campaign and the bloody
struggle at Monte Cassino.
The new books tell, too, of the
AK (the home army) and the
“peasant battalions”—non-Com-1
munist resistance groups which
battled the Germans inside Po
•; —fflfrgrg to Ding—.
fiU f |,,k V#rily Hi* finoit food
Ula IrIUD any wh*r* Enjoy ,1 at j
B-.1... l you (it*. ROAST
Rfsnurint ti(r turret, ham.
Mi s. Wo,h. CHICKEN, SEA ROODS. |
Alexandria. V*. IORSTER, Champagne,
Cocktail*, FinorWtnoi.i
Cool Drink., Air Cond. Clai.d Man '
Pirtln. Banucti. R*r«ptlon« •
l ~
DnOF leak!)
LA. 6-6600 /
GICHNERt
ODORLESS
ALKYD
PAINTS
! CUNMNfiHAM PAINT CO.
1234 20* St. N.W.-MI. 1 2470
Dtlntry
Wanted
•CRAP Mmu-IAOI
a[«IPAPCRA-NAOAPI«ltll
IUCOATKR COnAINIU
orrin iitardi |
k|/**Ao Ad —. I I—
"u-rt n ..-.•MiT |
land in World War 11. At one
time, a man who admitted to
AK membership could not get a
job.
Long Task Expected
One Warsaw teacher—a party
member summed up the
changes this way:
“It will be a long business to
get this thing really straightened
jout. You can't produce new text
books overnight.
“And it will be an expensive
business. But our people must be
ready to meet the cost, if we are
to stop the poisoning of the souls
of our children.”
FAMOUS AS
THE CUSTOM
59 e
M Quart
in Gallon Jug
i HIGH'S
OPEN DAILY
o.m, to 11 zJ\
There’s a Hi fit’s Store Near
You!
From All of ll* At
mm
®fl
wj Wl A ****•»•* ||» HUH lizsil
PrU. t , hott * H '.,. '*
THE EVENING STAR. Washington. D. C.
TUESDAY. DECEMBER 88. 1050
Woodward & [othrop
[""down stairs store
\
IIP *
l mm, & • i
The Whole Family Wants Pictures
of the Christmas Dinner Sweetheart
Who stole the hearts of grandparents, aurtts
and uncles at the Christmas gathering?
Your youngster. Have your child photo
graphed to please the family admirers.
WHILE SCHOOL IS OUT THIS WEEK
6 tint photographs AOQ
of your child 0
1 big Ixlo portrait far yaa ta kaap
2 flna IxT'a far tha | ran dpi rants
3 paekat-alxa pleturai far ralatlvaa
No appointment needed. Proofs shown.
Down Stairs Store, Photograph Studio, North Building
HAS THE BEST .F r yjng
IN TOWN!
A-25

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